Title: Labor Quality and Quantity
1Labor Quality and Quantity
- Quality, quantity, and composition of labor force
are of great importance to an employer - Labor Quality
- The skills, education, and attitudes of available
employees - Labor Quantity
- The number of available employees with the skills
required to meet an employers business needs
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2Worldwide Labor Conditions and Trends
- Overall size and sector of the work force
- International labor trends
- Aging of populations
- Rural to urban shift
- Unemployment
- Immigrant labor
- Child labor
- Forced labor
- Brain drain
- Guest workers
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3Percentage of the Population aged 65 or More
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4Unemployment
- 3.1 billion workers in 2008 (per UN, ILO)
- 200 million overall are unemployed
- Middle East and North Africa (13.2)
- Sub-Saharan Africa (9.7)
- Central and Eastern Europe (9.7)
- Latin America and Caribbean (7.7)
- Developed economies (6.7)
- Southeast Asia and the Pacific (6.1)
- South Asia (4.7)
- East Asia (3.8)
- 45 of unemployed are between age 15 and 24
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5Labor Mobility
- Labor Mobility refers to the movement of people
from country to country or area to area to get
jobs - Immigration refers to the process of leaving
ones home country to reside in another country - Foreign-born
- Population comprises those immigrants whose move
is permanent and may include taking citizenship - Foreign
- Population who are guest workers
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6Nations With the Highest Number of International
Migrants
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7Labor
- Child labor
- The labor of children below 16 years of age who
are forced to work in production and usually
receive little or no formal education - Primarily found in developing nations
- Existent in developed countries
- 70 are in agriculture
- Forced labor (27 million today) mostly in
- South and East Asia
- Northern and western Africa
- parts of Latin America
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8Brain Drain
- Brain drain refers to the loss by a country of
its most intelligent and best-educated people - Record numbers of immigrants are moving to OECD
countries in search of jobs - When skilled workers migrate from developing
countries they do so for professional
opportunities and economic reasons - Reverse brain drain refers to the growth of
outsourcing and the movement of highly educated,
technologically skilled employees and research
scientists to other countries
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9Brain Drain
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10Foreign-Born Individuals with Science or
Engineering Ph.D.
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11Guest Workers
- Guest workers are people who go to a foreign
country legally to perform certain types of jobs - Guest workers provide the labor host countries
need - Guest workers are desirable as long as the
economies are growing - When economies slow, fewer workers are needed and
problems appear
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12Considerations in Employment Policies
- Social Status
- Important with respect to labor force, especially
in some cultures - Caste the group to which people belong in a
system under which peoples place or level in a
multilevel society is established at birth as
being the same level as that of their parents - Sexism refers to the acceptability of women as
full and equal participants in the work force
ranges widely - Worldwide, 59 of all businesses include women in
senior management positions
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13Womens Education
- Studies show a direct correlation between womens
education and - birthrates
- child survival rates
- family health
- a nations overall prosperity
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14Female Illiteracy
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15Women in Parliament
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16Maternity Leave
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17Ratio of Wages, Woman versus Men, Selected OECD
Countries
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18Racism
- Black and White conflict
- U.S., South Africa, Great Britain and elsewhere
- Arab-, Indian-, or Pakistani and Black conflict
- Africa
- Tamils and Sinhalese Conflict
- Sri Lanka
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19Minorities
- Traditional Societies
- Tribal peoples before they turn to organized
agriculture or industry traditional customs may
linger after the economy changes - Minorities
- A relatively smaller number of people identified
by race, religion, or national origin who live
among a larger majority
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20Employer-Employee Relationships
- The labor market refers to the pool of available
potential employees with the necessary skills
within commuting distance from an employer - A company must study the labor market when
considering whether to invest in a country - Sources include
- Foreign Labor Trends
- Handbook of Labor Statistics
- Yearbook of Labor Statistics
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21Country Strike RatesSelected OECD Nations
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22Labor Unions
- European labor
- Identified with political parties and socialist
ideology - United States labor
- Laborers already have many civil rights
- Collective bargaining
- A union represents the interests of a bargaining
unit (sometimes includes both union members and
nonmembers) in negotiations with management
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23Labor Unions
- Japanese unions are enterprise-based rather than
industry wide - Unions tend to identify strongly with company
interests - Research shows that of all developed country
workers, Japanese workers are the least satisfied
with their jobs
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24Labor Union Membership Trends
- Employers have made efforts to keep their
businesses union-free - More women and teenagers have joined the work
force, low loyalty to unions - The unions have been successful in raising wages,
which leads to offshoring - In the knowledge economy, industrial jobs that
have formed the core of union membership are
declining
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25Multinational Labor Activities
- Internationalization of companies creates
opportunities for them to escape the reach of
unions - In response, unions have begun to
- collect and disseminate information about
companies - consult with unions in other countries
- coordinate with those unions policies and
tactics - encourage international companies codes of
conduct - Multinational unionism is developing
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26Multinational Labor Activities
- The International Labor Organization (ILO)
promotes social justice and recognizes human and
labor rights worldwide - The Trade Union Advisory Committee to the OECD
consults on trade union issues in global markets
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27Union Membership Across Countries
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